Literary usage of Staddles

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1.Suffolk Words and Phrases: Or, An Attempt to Collect the Lingual Localisms by Edward Moor (1823)"In an ODA is " staddles, young tender trees. Such, in thinning woods, are left
to tiller; which see. Bed-.staj<Z, may have arisen from the sense of support. ..."

2.General View of the Agriculture of the County of Nottingham: With by Robert Lowe (1798)"It is the custom of this country to put corn mostly into ricks, often set on
stone staddles, or brick pillars, about three or four feet high, ..."

3.The Beauties of England and Wales, Or, Delineations, Topographical by John Britton, Edward Wedlake Brayley, Joseph Nightingale, James Norris Brewer, John Evans, John Hodgson, Francis Charles Laird, Frederic Shoberl, John Bigland, Thomas Rees, Thomas Hood, John Harris (1810)"The next business is to turn lite staddles, aufl after that to turn the grass
that was ... After dinner, the staddles are formed into double wind rows, ..."

4.The Farmer's Encyclopædia, and Dictionary of Rural Affairs: Embracing All by Cuthbert William Johnson (1844)"Next, the grass-cocks are to be well shaken out into staddles (or separate plats)
of five or six yards diameter. If the crop should be so thin and light as ..."

5.London and Middlesex: Or, An Historical, Commercial, & Descriptive Survey of by Edward Wedlake Brayley, James Norris Brewer, Joseph Nightingale (1810)"The next business is to turn th* staddles, and after that to turn the grass that was
... After dinner, the staddles are formed into double wind rows, ..."

6.London and Middlesex: Or, An Historical, Commercial, & Descriptive Survey of by Edward Wedlake Brayley, James Norris Brewer, Joseph Nightingale (1810)"The next business is to turn the staddles, and after that to turn the grass that was
... After dinner, the staddles are formed into double wind rows, ..."